In The Matter of The Application of Evergy Missouri West INC d/b/a Evergy Missouri West for a Financing Order Authorizing The Financing of Extraordinary Storm Costs Through an Issuance of Securitized Utility Tariff Bonds, Missouri Public Service Commission; Evergy Missouri West INC. v. Office of Public Counsel

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 26, 2023
DocketWD85958
StatusPublished

This text of In The Matter of The Application of Evergy Missouri West INC d/b/a Evergy Missouri West for a Financing Order Authorizing The Financing of Extraordinary Storm Costs Through an Issuance of Securitized Utility Tariff Bonds, Missouri Public Service Commission; Evergy Missouri West INC. v. Office of Public Counsel (In The Matter of The Application of Evergy Missouri West INC d/b/a Evergy Missouri West for a Financing Order Authorizing The Financing of Extraordinary Storm Costs Through an Issuance of Securitized Utility Tariff Bonds, Missouri Public Service Commission; Evergy Missouri West INC. v. Office of Public Counsel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In The Matter of The Application of Evergy Missouri West INC d/b/a Evergy Missouri West for a Financing Order Authorizing The Financing of Extraordinary Storm Costs Through an Issuance of Securitized Utility Tariff Bonds, Missouri Public Service Commission; Evergy Missouri West INC. v. Office of Public Counsel, (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Western District IN THE MATTER OF THE ) APPLICATION OF EVERGY ) MISSOURI WEST INC D/B/A ) WD85958 EVERGY MISSOURI WEST FOR ) A FINANCING ORDER ) OPINION FILED: AUTHORIZING THE FINANCING ) September 26, 2023 OF EXTRAORDINARY STORM ) COSTS THROUGH AN ISSUANCE ) OF SECURITIZED UTILITY ) TARIFF BONDS, MISSOURI ) PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION, ) ) Respondent; ) ) EVERGY MISSOURI WEST INC., ) ) Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) OFFICE OF PUBLIC COUNSEL, ) ) Appellant. )

Appeal from the Public Service Commission

Before Division Four: Gary D. Witt, Chief Judge, Presiding, Cynthia L. Martin, Judge, and Chad Gaddie, Special Judge

The Office of the Public Counsel ("OPC") appeals from an Amended Report and

Order issued by the Public Service Commission of the State of Missouri ("PSC") on

November 17, 2022, which granted Evergy Missouri West, Inc. d/b/a Evergy Missouri West ("Evergy West") the authority pursuant to section 393.17001 to issue securitized

utility tariff bonds to recover extraordinary costs associated with a winter storm. OPC

argues that the PSC's calculation of qualified extraordinary costs that could be securitized

is unreasonable because: (i) the extraordinary costs should have been offset by a tax

deduction Evergy West received; (ii) carrying costs should have been calculated using a

short-term debt rate instead of a long-term debt rate; and (iii) the wrong discount rate was

used to analyze the net present value of recovery through securitization. OPC also

complains that the PSC's Amended Report and Order is unlawful because it failed to

sufficiently describe a statutorily required reconciliation process.

Finding no error, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background2

The Securitization Law

In 2021, the Missouri General Assembly enacted section 393.1700 (the

"Securitization Law"), effective August 28, 2021. The Securitization Law is a complex,

technical, and lengthy statute that contemplates a sophisticated financial transaction. The

Securitization Law permits electrical corporations to petition the PSC for permission to

recover unusual costs, known as "securitized utility tariff costs," through the issuance of

securitized bonds if approved in a PSC-issued financing order. "Securitized utility tariff

1 All statutory references are to RSMo Supp. 2021 unless further noted. 2 The salient facts are largely uncontested by OPC, and are drawn from factual findings set forth in the PSC's Amended Report and Order. 2 costs" are defined by section 393.1700.1(17) as "either energy transition costs3 or

qualified extraordinary costs as the case may be." This case involves use of the

Securitization Law to recover "qualified extraordinary costs."

Section 393.1700.1(13) defines "qualified extraordinary costs" as:

costs incurred prudently before, on, or after August 28, 2021, of an extraordinary nature which would cause extreme customer rate impacts if reflected in retail customer rates recovered through customary ratemaking, such as but not limited to those related to purchases of fuel or power, inclusive of carrying charges, during anomalous weather events.

To permit recovery of qualified extraordinary costs through the issuance of securitized

bonds, the PSC must issue a financing order. Section 393.1700.1(9) defines "financing

order" as:

an order from the commission that authorizes the issuance of securitized utility tariff bonds; the imposition, collection, and periodic adjustments of a securitized utility tariff charge; the creation of securitized utility tariff property; and the sale, assignment, or transfer of securitized utility tariff property to an assignee.

(Emphasis added.) "Securitized utility tariff bonds" is defined in pertinent part by section

393.1700.1(15) as:

. . . evidence[] of indebtedness or ownership . . . issued by an electrical corporation or an assignee pursuant to a financing order, the proceeds of which are used directly or indirectly to recover, finance, or refinance commission-approved securitized utility tariff costs and financing costs, and that are secured by or payable from securitized utility tariff property.

3 The Securitization Law also authorizes the issuance of securitized bonds to recover energy transition costs, defined by section 393.1700.1(7) as incurred in connection with the retirement or abandonment of an electric generating facility. The recovery of energy transition costs through the issuance of securitized bonds is not at issue in this case. 3 (Emphasis added.) "Financing costs" is defined by section 393.1700.1(8) to include a

multitude of costs, fees, taxes, and charges incurred in connection with the upfront

issuance of securitized utility tariff bonds or during the lifespan of the bonds. The

proceeds of the securitized utility tariff bonds are secured by or payable from "securitized

utility tariff property," defined by section 393.1700.1(18)(a) to include:

All rights and interests of an electrical corporation . . . under a financing order, including the right to impose, bill, charge, collect, and receive securitized utility tariff charges authorized under the financing order . . . .

(Emphasis added.) "Securitized utility tariff charge" is defined by section 393.1700.1(16)

in pertinent part as:

the amounts authorized by the commission to repay, finance, or refinance securitized utility tariff costs and financing costs and that are, except as otherwise provided for in this section, nonbypassable charges imposed on and part of all retail customer bills, collected . . . full, separate and apart from the electrical corporation's base rates . . . .

Authorized securitized utility tariff bonds can be issued by an electrical

corporation or its "assignee," defined in pertinent part by section 393.1700.1(2) as:

a legally recognized entity to which an electrical corporation assigns, sells, or transfers, other than as security, all or a portion of its interest in or right to securitized utility tariff property. Simplified, the Securitization Law allows an electrical corporation to seek

approval from the PSC to issue a financing order that authorizes the electrical corporation

or its assignee to issue bonds. The bonds are in the amount of the electrical corporation's

qualified extraordinary costs (or energy transition costs) and approved financing costs the

electrical corporation elects to include in its request. Upon the sale of the bonds, the

electrical corporation will immediately recover its qualified extraordinary costs (or

4 energy transition costs). Then, the electrical corporation's customers are assessed a tariff

charge on their utility bills over the lifespan of the bonds that is in an amount sufficient to

pay the principal and interest on the bonds, and anticipated ongoing financing costs, over

the lifespan of the bonds. The revenue stream represented by the tariff charges is the

primary property that securitizes the bonds.

The option of financing qualified extraordinary costs through the issuance of

securitized utility tariff bonds is intended to benefit customers by affording an electrical

corporation an option for recovery of the costs other than through its base rates, a fuel

adjustment clause ("FAC"), or a deferred accounting authority order ("AAO"). In theory,

securitization of extraordinary costs incurred during an anomalous weather event should

save utility customers money or be otherwise advantageous to utility customers because

the interest rate paid on securitized bonds is lower that the interest rate that would be

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In The Matter of The Application of Evergy Missouri West INC d/b/a Evergy Missouri West for a Financing Order Authorizing The Financing of Extraordinary Storm Costs Through an Issuance of Securitized Utility Tariff Bonds, Missouri Public Service Commission; Evergy Missouri West INC. v. Office of Public Counsel, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-application-of-evergy-missouri-west-inc-dba-evergy-moctapp-2023.